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пятница, 30 июня 2023 г.

Why Human-To-Human Marketing Is the Next Big Trend in a Tech-Obsessed World

 


While multiple sessions at this month’s Cannes Lions festival looked at harnessing data and artificial intelligence, at B2B International we’ve been conducting some pretty interesting research into the role of emotion in business decision-making.

The surprising fact is that in the process of choosing a supplier, when it comes down to deciding between the two final contenders in a pitch process, a very significant 56% of the choice comes down to emotional factors.

Clearly this means marketers need to think harder than ever about building a human connection with potential customers – so we were very interested to see at least one discussion at Cannes looking at how to combine the benefits of automation with an increasing desire for a one-to-one, completely personal service.

Called ‘Human-to-human marketing in a world of technology’, the discussion featured Elizabeth Rutledge, American Express’ chief marketing officer, talking about the brand’s global marketing journey and how they are balancing technology with humanity.

‘Tech can connect us but also push us far apart,’ Rutledge said. She called for a ‘focus on digital empathy’ – that is, making things more personal and fusing marketing with a real human touch. ‘The more relevant tech becomes, the more we value true, human qualities,’ she added.

Rutledge’s philosophy ties in with the findings of our own ‘Winning with Emotion’ research, particularly our insight that business-to-business communication IS human-to-human connection.

Tracking the full decision-making process from research to appointment, we discovered that although rational factors such as an acceptable price, viable product quality and effective distribution form the minimum requirements necessary to enter and rise to the top of the consideration set, generating an emotional connection is ultimately what counts when the final decision is made.

It is critical for suppliers to have a strong brand in which customers feel emotionally invested – not only does it impact on the final decision, but 95% of decision-makers stated that even before contacting a supplier, feeling a sense of connection to a supplier’s brand is as important as feeling confident about what they do.

Whatever they might claim about their logical thinking, there is also the fact that business decision-makers don’t simply leave their experiences as consumers at the front desk.

SME decision-makers in particular, rely on their experiences as consumers when choosing a supplier. While 26% of enterprise decision-makers reported to have been influenced by their consumer experiences, 34% within SMEs reported doing so. Suppliers who serve both businesses and consumers should be aware of the synergies between their B2B and B2C offers and ensure an excellent experience and consistency across both.

So how can B2B brands form better connections with customers? Here’s the strategy we have identified:

Create positive word-of-mouth by delivering an excellent customer experience. Recommendations are important, so this can give potential buyers confidence from the outset in the suppliers they consider.

Strengthen thought-leadership positioning to connect with potential buyers. Business decision makers reported that a demonstration of expertise via content marketing was the third-most important factor in evaluating suppliers under consideration. For enterprise decision-makers, thought leadership was even more influential (ranking as the second-most important factor).

Clearly communicate your point of differentiation and sell on value because although B2B buyers are not driven by price alone, the value they perceive a supplier can add to their business is crucial.

Build connections with the influencer network because B2B decisions are rarely made unilaterally. In 80% of cases, more than one person is involved in the decision and for a third of purchase decisions, a team of four or more is required. So, do aim to connect emotionally with multiple stakeholders (often from different functions) rather than focusing all efforts on the one person traditionally considered “the decision maker”.

We also thought that Elizabeth Rutledge’s final remarks at Cannes were worth repeating: “Go out and find the empathy,” she said. “Create real human connections one customer at a time.”

It’s really something to think about. Human-to-human marketing is going to transform what we do in the most positive way imaginable – a brave new world we can embrace in good faith.

https://www.b2binternational.com/

суббота, 29 октября 2022 г.

4 Steps to Establishing Stronger Emotional Connections With Your Customers

 

Nick Hague


B2C companies have known the power of emotional engagement for decades.

But in the B2B sphere, this insight is just emerging.

The emotional aspects of brands are just as important as the logical side. In fact, they’re inseparable.

From our research at B2B International, we’ve identified four steps to establishing stronger emotional connections:

  1. Trust. In the beginning, reputation is everything. Getting in the door means delivering on your promise.

  2. Empathy. What are your buyer’s needs? Show them that you not only know them, but deeply care too.

  3. Enrichment. Customers become loyal when brands significantly impact their life. Empower your customers to achieve more.

  4. Eminence. The most prestigious brands are ones that customers are proud to align with. This is the ultimate goal: to be held in high esteem by your customers.

In these trying times we are currently living in with the coronavirus pandemic, connecting these four pieces evolves your product or service from a practical offering into one satisfying your customer’s emotional needs (and emotions are running high right now!).

воскресенье, 6 февраля 2022 г.

Brand strategy research & brand architecture research: Enhance your brand portfolio

 Make objective, strategic decisions about your corporate and product brand portfolio through structured and representative market research.

Brand strategy research & brand architecture research will help you grow your brands and avoid the risk of cross-brand cannibalization and overlapping marketing / product development expenses.

Our approach: The Emotional Engagement Ladder


  • The more engaged a customer is with a brand, the greater emotional attachment there is to the brand.  Emotions play a major role in decision making and leading brands in a market are more successful in connecting with their customers on an emotional level.

  • Through our research, we have identified four different levels of emotional engagement.  Through our research, we can assess which brands in your portfolio are positioned on which steps of the ladder (as well as any which do not emotionally engage with the market in a meaningful way).

  • Armed with this understanding, companies can avoid cannibalization by aligning each brand with a specific market segment, while also striving to create stronger emotional connections with the market through each of its brands

Steer your brands to success

Far too many companies have product labels which they think are brands. However, a brand is something people ask for by name. A brand stands for something – something that has been engineered as a perception – not something that has simply arisen without direction.

In other words, a brand needs a strategy and, in developing one, it is worth asking these four important questions:

  1. Will you have a monolithic brand (a single brand name under which you have sub brands) or separate independent brands each requiring their own brand strategy?
  2. How do your brands fit together under the umbrella brand of your company name?
  3. What is it that makes your products (or services) so special that they deserve to be a brand?
  4. How many brands can you afford to have given that each brand will require nurturing and feeding with a marketing resource?

Case study: Measuring brand perceptions to inform brand portfolio expansion and alignment


Our client, a leading manufacturer of industrial and medical protection solutions, wanted to expand its product range into the life sciences market and sell protective equipment for use in environments such as clean rooms, where pharmaceuticals are produced.

In order to support the portfolio expansion, the manufacturer had recently acquired a brand, which was strong in this space. However, the image of the acquired brand was very different from the manufacturer’s image. Therefore, our client needed to determine how to properly align all the brands under its portfolio while still highlighting each brands’ individual strengths.

The Solution

We conducted 80 semi-structured telephone interviews with laboratory managers & similar roles about their needs & requirements when it came to disposable gloves, garments, and eye protection, brand perceptions of various PPE brands, and obtained their feedback on a series of messaging concepts to determine which resonated best with the target audience.

The Insight

As it turned out, our clients brand was quite well-known and seen as professional, while the acquired brand imagery was not preferred. It was recommended that our client incorporate the newly acquired brand under its brand portfolio with advertising and messaging that better reflected its expertise and experience serving the life sciences industry.

https://bit.ly/3LdVwBx

суббота, 24 октября 2020 г.

Emotional Intelligence

 The capability of people to perform the work or job that they do falls into three areas:

Technical skills – which includes technical expertise e.g. accountancy skills.

Intellectual capability – which is commonly known as IQ, or cognitive abilities.

Emotional capability – often referred to as emotional intelligence or EI.


Whilst a significant amount of information, research and education exists in the fields of technical skills and intellectual capability, the area of Emotional Intelligence remains largely untouched.


What is Emotional Intelligence?

Emotional intelligence is the ability to recognise, understand and manage emotions in ourselves and others.

Emotional Intelligence is divided into the four clusters of Self-Awareness, Self-Management, Social Awareness and Relationship Management (often been referred to very broadly as “people skills” in years gone by).


Daniel Goleman, a leader in this field, has identified that successful managers and leaders possess a high percentage of emotional intelligence. By successful we mean those who have; Achieved better financial results,

Developed more effective and supportive organisational climates or culture and Achieved higher productivity gains with their workforce. Goleman’s (1998) findings also indicated that Emotional Intelligence contributes 80 to 90% of the competencies that distinguish outstanding leaders from average leaders.


The behaviours identified include;

the ability to recognise and understand their own moods, emotions and drives as well as their effect on others;

the ability to control or redirect disruptive impulses, moods and to think before acting;

the passion to work for reasons beyond money or status and the propensity to pursue goals with energy and persistence;

the ability to understand the emotional makeup of other people and the skill in treating people according to their emotional reactions; the proficiency in managing relationships, building networks and the ability to find common ground and build rapport.


IQ versus EI

In professional and technical fields the typical entry-level threshold IQ is 110 to 120. It is generally considered that your IQ, which is largely genetic, will change little from childhood. Since everyone is in the top 10% or so of intelligence, IQ itself offers relatively little competitive advantage.

EI on the other hand can be learned at any age. Growing your competency in EI is not easy or quick, as it takes perseverance in the process of critical self-evaluation, commitment to improvement and of course behavioural practice.

It is also important to note, that competence in Emotional Intelligence does not necessarily increase with age as you might expect. Some people may learn from life’s experiences, but many do not.


Self-Awareness:

The core of Emotional Intelligence is self-awareness. Self-awareness is comprised of three competencies;

emotional self-awareness, where you are able to read and understand your emotions as well as recognise their impact on work performance and relationships; accurate self-assessment, where you are able to give a realistic evaluation of your strengths and limitations; self-confidence, where you have a positive and strong sense of one’s self-worth. The starting point and key in these areas is the ability to be critically self-reflective.


Self-Management

Self-management is comprised of five competencies;

Self-control, which is keeping disruptive emotions and impulses under control;

transparency, which is maintaining standards of honesty and integrity, managing yourself and responsibilities;

adaptability, which is the flexibility in adapting to changing situations and overcoming obstacles;

achievement orientation, which is the guiding drive to meet an internal standard of excellence;

initiative, which is the readiness to seize opportunities and act.


Social Awareness

Social Awareness is comprised of three competencies;

empathy, which is understanding others and taking an active interest in their concerns;

organisational awareness, which is the ability to read the currents of organisational life, build decision networks and navigate politics;

service orientation, which is recognising and meeting customers needs.


Relationship Management

The Social cluster of Relationship Management is comprised of seven competencies;

visionary leadership, which is inspiring and guiding groups and individuals;

developing others, which is the propensity to strengthen and support the abilities of others through feedback and guidance;

influence, which is the ability to exercise a wide range of persuasive strategies with integrity, and also includes listening and sending clear, convincing and well-tuned messages;

change catalyst, which is the proficiency in initiating new ideas and leading people in a new direction;

conflict management, which is resolving disagreements and collaboratively developing resolutions; building bonds, which is building and maintaining relationships with others;

teamwork and collaboration, which is the promotion of cooperation and building of teams.


The Emotionally Intelligent Organisation

The Emotionally Intelligent Organisation i.e. an organisation with a high number of emotionally intelligent leaders, managers and critical professionals stands to be at the forefront of organisational practice and performance, and is more likely to be an employer of choice.


Research also supports the view that competence in Emotional Intelligence accounts for over 90% of the difference between ineffective leaders and effective leadership performance.


Effective leadership improves business performance and provides organisations with a competitive advantage.


Becoming an EI organisation

The decision to become an emotionally intelligent organisation needs to be based on an organisational strategy to improve business performance.


To implement this strategy you first need to define what the core capabilities your business requires to achieve its vision, values and business strategies which includes Emotional Intelligence clusters and competencies. You will also need to identify the more specific competency profiles for positions within the organisation.


This capability framework and competency profiles, then forms the basis for your performance management system in conjunction with your Key Performance Indicators. The performance management system then becomes a mechanism for driving and achieving changes in the workplace.


The framework can also be used to support recruitment and selection and other cultural development strategies, thus ensuring a more appropriate match of people and organization goals.  The next stage is to grow the emotional intelligence competencies through specific development programs reflecting the organisation’s capability framework.


If you do not have a “core” capability framework for your staff, there are still benefits in introducing Emotional Intelligence development programs. These are seen primarily through improved leadership and interpersonal relationships and as a result improved business performance.


Growing Emotional Intelligence

Growing your EI competencies is not easy or quick, as it takes perseverance in the process of critical self-reflection, commitment to improvement and of course behavioural practice.


Transformational Learning

When you grow your Emotional Intelligence, it is called transformational learning, as this growth comes from using critical self-reflection.


So, what is critical self-reflection? Most people would be familiar with reflection, which is the analysis of one’s beliefs. We also have critical reflection, which is the analysis of the assumptions on which our beliefs are built. But the area we are most interested in is Critical Self-Reflection, which is the analysis of the way we pose problems to ourselves and of our own structure of assumptions that we use as a reference for interpreting our experiences.


Effective critical self-reflection requires you to question yourself and the assumptions you make on an ongoing basis. This can be demonstrated through the three (3) why? Test, that is where you ask “Why” down three levels from the item you are analysing.

For example, I have been asked to present a workshop to one hundred people on a subject I know very well, and I have said no.

(1) Why did I say no? Because I would not feel comfortable doing it.

(2) Why do you feel uncomfortable about doing it? Because I might look incompetent.

(3) Why do you feel you would look incompetent? Because people in the audience may know more than I do.


The answer to this question is based on assumptions, and we need to challenge these assumptions to check their validity. If the assumptions are invalid and we change that assumption and therefore our perspective then transformational learning has occurred.


https://bit.ly/2TmM5pR

четверг, 28 декабря 2017 г.

Emotional SEO?


Search engine optimization involves a series of external and internal factors, from HTML tags to the creation of quality content, through the user experience, and hundreds of other factors. Based on what SEO is and what it works for, we can say that Emotional SEO is a new way, different from doing SEO. More human.

Emotional SEO is a more humane way of doing SEO. Consists of including emotions in the different factors that influence search engine optimization

Emotions are part of us and are part of each of the communicative processes we perform on a day-to-day basis. There are different theories about emotions, authors that classify emotions as positive or negative, those that show the existence of basic and advanced emotions, and others more known as the one emitted by Paul Ekman. This author defends that there are six basic emotions: sadness, happiness, surprise, disgust, fear and anger.
“An emotion is not simply a feeling state. Emotion is a complex chain of loosely connected events that begins with a stimulus and includes feelings, psychological changes, impulses to action and specific, goal-directed behavior” (Plutchik, R. 2001, American Scientist, vol. 89).
The human feels and manifests these emotions, the same ones that lead him to perform different actions in response. If this scenario is transferred to the Internet, we can see how emotions are also part of SEO and search processes.
Speaking of emotions in SEO is focused on creating contents that provoke desire, joy, sadness … that make the user feel. How do they feel when reading certain online content? What experience have you had on our website? However, we can take a step forward and talk about Emotional SEO from a more scientific point of view.
All content, regardless of the extension, may contain emotional charge. This is because words show emotions, with more or less valence, have degrees of excitement and also dominance. There are numerous dictionaries, lexicons and tools that are responsible for the analysis of feeling and the emotional classification of words.
If all the knowledge about sentiment analysis is transferred to SEO … let’s see what happens.

GEMMA GARCÍA LÓPEZ

https://goo.gl/ctRerM


четверг, 8 июня 2017 г.

Customer Happiness Shouldn’t Be a Novelty


Any longtime customer service champion knows their job isn’t just about resolving problems; it’s about making customers happy.
We’ve all heard the one-off stories of legendary customer service: the time a Morton’s employee brought a steak to a customer at the airport, or when Sainsbury’s renamed a product at a young customer’s suggestion. But how do you make these unforgettable moments the norm rather than the exception?
Inspiring your customers to fall in love with your company requires more than grand gestures. It takes an ongoing investment of consistently great service. This can feel daunting, especially if you’re a small business with limited staff, but by incorporating a few core principles into your business model, customer happiness can be integrated into everything you do.

10 ways to make customers fall in love with your business

Here are some creative ideas from the most customer-centric companies on the planet — adapt them to your own customers for happy results!

1. Be human

Customers want to interact with human beings who are warm, friendly and helpful. In every aspect of your company — from email marketing to your help desk — approach people like you would approach neighbors (warmly but respectfully). By creating a human experience, you can spark meaningful relationships with current and future customers.

2. Always listen

Listening is an underrated skill. After all, don’t you hate being interrupted? There are a lot of ways to listen to customers, but the most important thing is to make sure they know you hear them.
During all interactions, mirror back the experiences of customers with understanding. Combined with social listening tools and feedback analysis, this empathetic approach can set off fireworks between you and your community.

3. Be transparent about changes, setbacks and breakthroughs

Every organization is going to hit blips and bumps that disrupt business. Whether it’s a snow day or a data leak, you’re more likely to recover if you get out in front of the problem. Always practice transparency. Share the problem and your concerns, along with any steps you’re taking to resolve the issue.
Don’t forget: Your community wants to hear about awesome breakthroughs, too. Exercise good judgment, and lean into these opportunities to build exciting relationships with a growing community.

4. Treat every customer like a VIP

Being a VIP has some real perks. More than any specific benefit, VIP status offers the warm-and-fuzzy that someone values and appreciates you. The good news is that you can give that to every customer, regardless of their budget or needs.
“Getting service right is more than just a nice to do; it’s a must do. American consumers are willing to spend more with companies that provide outstanding service — ultimately, great service can drive sales and customer loyalty.”
Start by offering every customer your undivided attention, and personalize content so they’re always hearing a voice made just for them. You’ll create VIPs who will not only buy more, they’ll give you referral after referral.

5. Value consistency above all else

In the service industry, you’re only as good as the last meal you serve — and that’s true of any customer service business. It actually takes 12 positive experiences to offset one not-so-great interaction.
To hit the mark every time, companies need to empower employees with cohesive values, standards and guidelines for interacting with customers. The trick is to provide consistency in the level of service while still enabling team members to play to their strengths.

6. Love your employees

The quickest way to make customers fall head-over-heels for your company is to appreciate your employees. (Yes, you read that right!) Rodd Wagner shares this perfect formula in Forbes:
Happy employees = longer tenure = consistent training = employee expertise = happy customers
Employee happiness has a big impact on the long-term performance of a company. After all, no loyal customer wants to learn that their favorite employee had to leave for higher pay.

7. Trust your customers and clients

I learned working in retail that trust is always reciprocal. When customers didn’t meet the credit card minimum at the shop, the owner would let them take their purchase and come back with cash later. People were so struck with gratitude that they came back with the money — and then some! If you give your customers the benefit of the doubt, they’ll extend the same courtesy to you.

8. Apologize — and make it right

Saying sorry is always essential, but sorry isn’t always enough. Companies need to put that sentiment into action to make customers fall in love. First, fix the actual issue. Next, make up for the fact that there was a problem at all.
Empower happy customer service teams with the flexibility (and resources) to “wow” customers. With the right resources, they can make up for the problem with a meaningful gesture that more than matches the enormity of the mistake or hassle.

9. Offer regular rewards

“If you’re competitor-focused, you have to wait until there is a competitor doing something. Being customer-focused allows you to be more pioneering."
— Jeff Bezos, Founder, Amazon
Companies like Southwest AirlinesPatagonia and Nordstrom have distilled customer loyalty to an art form, creating real value with their offerings. They know that one-time incentives are fun, but you need to sustain that momentum over time to have a real impact. Invest in regular rewards, incentives or sales that people look forward to — and add in one or two extra for a fun surprise.

10. Say ‘thank you’ again, and again, and again

Gratitude is a powerful emotion. Expressing it to customers builds positive feelings while humanizing your company in the eyes of the world.
So don’t sell yourself short — say thank you in every email and every interaction. Expressing gratitude this way also makes it more likely that someone (even a customer) will help you in the future. You’ll fall in love, too
These ten ways to make customers fall in love with your business are also fun for you. When you embrace happy customer service, you create the ideal environment for you and your team. What’s not to love?
ELIZABETH WELLINGTON

пятница, 22 июля 2016 г.

Putting new age organizations on ‘ICE’


Written by
Mike CoorayFaculty Member, Ashridge Executive Education at Hult International Business School
Rikke DuusSenior Teaching Fellow, UCL School of Management

In an interconnected and fiercely-paced world with digital disruption taking place across all industry sectors, it is of paramount importance that organizations re-visit their business models. Enabled by new digital capabilities, we are witnessing a shift from business as a zero-sum game to business as networked partnerships. These partnerships require organizations to strengthen their core value chain (e.g. suppliers, distributors and customers), while at the same time expanding their reach and engagement by collaborating with inter-and intra-industry partners.
Changing an organization’s structure to embrace collaboration and partnerships can be difficult, as most organizations operate in a challenging duality: on one hand dependent on others’ success to gain success themselves; on the other hand, required to outperform those same organizations to acquire differentiation, market value and a sustained competitive position.
However, with a focus on sustained growth and innovation, collaboration and partnerships is increasingly the way forward. A report by the World Economic Forum highlights that significant value can be created when a young business and an incumbent organization work together to share resources and collaborate on innovative ideas. Klaus Schwab, founder and executive chairman of the World Economic Forum highlights the importance of collaborative and flexible structures that reflect the integration of various ecosystems and which take fully into account all stakeholders.
The ICE framework
To help organizations operate in this dynamic and evolving environment with unprecedented speed of change and digital disruption, we propose a 3-step strategic approach. We call this the ‘ICE’ Framework.
The fundamental beliefs underpinning this framework are that organizations must extend their reach and intensify engagement with internal and external partners. This can be achieved at three stages. At each stage, we propose a particular leadership role, a strategic push and an engagement focus.
The thinking behind the framework is that organizations can enhance their innovation capabilities by first evaluating and building on their existing competencies, secondly acquiring new competencies through collaboration, andthirdly co-creating dynamic eco-systems with mutually empowered partners.
The ICE framework for organizations to adapt in the digital age


Below, we explain each stage in further detail.
Stage I: Influence + co-operate + engage
In Stage I, organizations should look to build current competencies by generating conversations and knowledge-sharing internally and with immediate partners. The strategic push is to encourage greater co-operation between individuals and cross functional teams. The role of the leader at this first stage is to create a co-operative environment by being more of an influencer than a commander and controller. This is achieved through encouraging open conversations within the organization and influencing those who lead those conversations to create innovation hubs.
Stage I can be achieved through the use of open innovation platforms, innovation competitions, creative hubs and digital conversational tools. Examples of internal innovation platforms include Google’s Moonshot FactoryThomson Reuter’s Catalyst Fund and P&G’s Connect + Develop. More and more organizations are also opening up conversations among their non-traditional teams with tools such as Skype for Business, Yammer, Slack and Facebook at Work. This extended co-operation, reach and engagement can support organizations to create a culture of innovation.
Stage II: Initiate + collaborate + enhance
In Stage II, organizations should build on the internal conversations and co-operation created at Stage I and extend their reach to collaborate with external partners. This can pave the way to acquire new competencies and identify opportunities for value-adding. The strategic push is to form new collaborative partnerships and gain access to resources and capabilities faster and more efficiently. These collaborations can be up-stream and down-stream. The leader’s role here is that of a proactive initiator, analyzing, evaluating and negotiating new opportunities that add value to the collaborating partners.
Collaborations in Stage II can be within and across industries. Often, collaborations are initiated to enhance competitiveness and build existing competencies. This is seen in how Ford Motor Company is responding to the disruption in the automobile industry. Ford has set up a Research & Innovation Center in Silicon Valley and has teamed up with Stanford University and MIT to advance automated driving research. We also see similar collaborations taking place between Emirates Airline and Oxford University with the launch of the new Data Science Lab. This Data Science Lab will use cutting-edge analysis to enhance the airline’s services to attain greater efficiencies and customer-focus.
Collaboration is also taking place between born digital businesses such as Uber and Hilton, which benefits both companies and their customers facilitating and extending better customer experiences. In addition to setting ‘Ride Reminders’ to and from the hotel, Hilton HHonors members can also access recommended restaurants and other hot spots based on the places most visited by other Uber riders. This is a mutually beneficial partnership that gives Hilton customers unique benefits and extends Uber and Hilton’s reach and engagement.
Stage III: Integrate + co-create + empower
In Stage III, we propose an approach of co-creation between multiple and heterogeneous organizations and partners. These all work within a dynamic eco-system. Here we see organizations joining a rapidly changing environment which requires hyper-agility in order to benefit from new and emergent opportunities. Stage III builds further on the core competencies built in Stage I and the experience of collaborating with external partners in Stage II. Therefore, at this stage, organizations will be equipped to work with multiple partners to create change across industries. The leadership role at this stage is to be an integrator with a strategic focus on evaluating risks, investment needs and organizational positioning within that co-created eco-system. This is a complete transformation of the traditional leadership approach of commander and control.
An example of a dynamic eco-system is General Electric’s Ecomaginationprogram. The goal is to create a network effect and inspire more companies to work together to solve the world’s big environmental challenges. GE partners with Total, Intel, Walmart, Goldman Sachs and Masdar to develop new, sustainable solutions to the most urgent water and energy problems. We also see diverse organizations such as ABB, Omega, Schindler, Google and Solvay coming together to co-create the world’s first solar powered aircraft, which may revolutionize travel and mobility at an unimaginable scale.
The ICE framework can be utilized by organizations to extend their reach and engagement through internal co-operation, by collaborating with external partners and through the co-creation of dynamic eco-systems. Applying these strategic stages can support organizations to move from a disrupted to a more connected and collaborative digital environment that we now all live and work in.

https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2016/07/putting-new-age-organizations-on-ice/

пятница, 6 ноября 2015 г.

The New Science of Customer Emotions




  • Scott Magids
  • Alan Zorfas and 
  • Daniel Leemon


  • When companies connect with customers’ emotions, the payoff can be huge. Consider these examples: After a major bank introduced a credit card for Millennials that was designed to inspire emotional connection, use among the segment increased by 70% and new account growth rose by 40%. Within a year of launching products and messaging to maximize emotional connection, a leading household cleaner turned market share losses into double-digit growth. And when a nationwide apparel retailer reoriented its merchandising and customer experience to its most emotionally connected customer segments, same-store sales growth accelerated more than threefold.
    Given the enormous opportunity to create new value, companies should pursue emotional connections as a science—and a strategy. But for most, building these connections is more guesswork than science. At the end of the day they have little idea what really works and whether their efforts have produced the desired results.
    Our research across hundreds of brands in dozens of categories shows that it’s possible to rigorously measure and strategically target the feelings that drive customers’ behavior. We call them “emotional motivators.” They provide a better gauge of customers’ future value to a firm than any other metric, including brand awareness and customer satisfaction, and can be an important new source of growth and profitability.
    At the most basic level, any company can begin a structured process of learning about its customers’ emotional motivators and conducting experiments to leverage them, later scaling up from there. At the other end of the spectrum, firms can invest in deep research and big data analytics or engage consultancies with specific expertise. Companies in financial services, retail, health care, and technology are now using a detailed understanding of emotional connection to attract and retain the most valuable customers. The most sophisticated firms are making emotional connection part of a broad strategy that involves every function in the value chain, from product development and marketing to sales and service.
    In what follows we’ll describe our research and our work with companies—to our knowledge, the first to show direct, robust links among specific emotional motivators, a firm’s actions to leverage them, consumer behavior, and business outcomes.

    Defining Emotional Motivators

    Our research stemmed from our frustration that companies we worked with knew customers’ emotions were important but couldn’t figure out a consistent way to define them, connect with them, and link them to results. We soon discovered that there was no standard lexicon of emotions, and so eight years ago we set out to create one, working with experts and surveying anthropological and social science research. We ultimately assembled a list of more than 300 emotional motivators. We consider customers to be emotionally connected with a brand when it aligns with their motivations and helps them fulfill deep, often unconscious, desires. Important emotional motivators include desires to “stand out from the crowd,” “have confidence in the future,” and “enjoy a sense of well-being,” to name just a few.
    Identifying and measuring emotional motivators is complicated, because customers themselves may not even be aware of them. These sentiments are typically different from what customers say are the reasons they make brand choices and from the terms they use to describe their emotional responses to particular brands. What’s more, as we’ll discuss, emotional connections with products are neither uniform nor constant; they vary by industry, brand, touchpoint, and the customer’s position in the decision journey.

    Why Emotional Connections Matter

    Although brands may be liked or trusted, most fail to align themselves with the emotions that drive their customers’ most profitable behaviors. Some brands by nature have an easier time making such connections, but a company doesn’t have to be born with the emotional DNA of Disney or Apple to succeed. Even a cleaning product or a canned food can forge powerful connections.
    The process, in brief, looks like this: Applying big data analytics to detailed customer-data sets, we first identify the emotional motivators for a category’s most valuable customers. High-value automobile customers, for example, might want to “feel a sense of belonging” and “feel a sense of freedom.” Next we use statistical modeling to look at a large number of customers and brands, comparing survey results about people’s emotional motivators with their purchase behavior and identifying spikes in buying that are associated with specific motivators. This reveals which motivators generate the most-profitable customer behaviors in the category. We then quantify the current and potential value of motivators for a given brand and help identify strategies to leverage them.
    The model also allows us to compare the value of making strong emotional connections with that of scoring well on standard customer metrics such as satisfaction and brand differentiation, thus highlighting the potential gains from looking beyond traditional measures. We find that customers become more valuable at each step of a predictable “emotional connection pathway” as they transition from (1) being unconnected to (2) being highly satisfied to (3) perceiving brand differentiation to (4) being fully connected. Although customers exhibit increasing connection at each step, their value increases dramatically when they reach the fourth step: Fully connected customers are 52% more valuable, on average, than those who are just highly satisfied. In fact, their relative value is striking across a variety of metrics, such as purchases and frequency of use.
    The pathway is an important guide to where companies should invest—and it reveals that they often invest in the wrong places. To increase revenue and market share, many companies focus on turning dissatisfied customers into satisfied ones. However, our analysis shows that moving customers from highly satisfied to fully connected can have three times the return of moving them from unconnected to highly satisfied. And the highest returns we’ve seen have come from focusing on customers who are already fully connected to the category—from maximizing their value and attracting more of them to your brand.
    Four insights from our research are especially relevant to firms looking to build on emotional connection.

    Emotional motivators vary by category and brand.

    Of the 300-plus motivators we’ve identified, 25 significantly affect customer value across all the categories we’ve analyzed. Anywhere from five to 15 additional motivators are important in any given category. For example, the sense that a home furnishings store “helps me be creative” inspires consumers to shop there more often. The wish to “feel revived and refreshed” drives loyalty to fast-food restaurants. Emotional motivators also vary within categories, depending on the desires of brands’ most valuable customers. Because brands differ in how well they align with their customers’ motivators, each may have a different starting point in any effort to strengthen emotional connections—and that point won’t necessarily relate to conventional measures of brand perception.

    Emotional motivators vary across customer segments.

    Recall the credit card designed with Millennials in mind. Our model uncovered desires to “protect the environment” and “be the person I want to be” as key motivators in the banking category for that age group. (Traditional industry motivators such as desires to “feel secure” and to “succeed in life” are more typical of older groups.) The bank crafted messaging and features to connect to those sentiments, leading to its fastest-growing new credit card.

    Emotional motivators for a given brand or industry vary with a person’s position in the customer journey.

    In banking, the desire to “feel secure” is a critical motivator when attracting and retaining customers early on. When cross-selling products later, the wish to “succeed in life” becomes more important. To maximize results, companies must align their emotional-connection strategies with their specific customer-engagement objectives—acquisition, retention, cross-selling, and so on.

    Emotional-connection-driven growth opportunities exist across the customer experience, not just in traditional brand positioning and advertising.

    For example, social media can have a big impact on emotional connection. One condiments brand found that 60% of its social-network-affiliated customers (especially followers on Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest)—versus 21% of all customers—were emotionally connected. It accelerated growth in a matter of months by increasing its focus on its social media network, developing its online customer community, and pointing customers to the website for recipes and promotions.

    Putting Emotional Connections to Work

    Let’s look at how an emotional-connection strategy paid off for a national fashion retailer. The company was struggling with common industry challenges. Although it had a well-known brand and a strong market presence, same-store sales were stagnating, and promotional pricing was shrinking margins. So it focused on cost management, logistical efficiency, and streamlining the merchandise and store mix—with limited success. Over the past two years we worked with the retailer on a four-part strategy to identify, understand, and quantify the value of the most emotionally connected customers. This exposed large, unexploited opportunities and allowed the retailer to better direct investments across the firm.

    1. Target connected customers.

    We set out to answer two basic questions: How valuable were the retailer’s fully connected customers, and could the company attract more of them? We used statistical techniques to measure the strength of customers’ emotional connections with the retailer and with its competitors. The process began with surveys to discern how consumers related to key motivators in the category and with analysis to see which motivators best predicted purchase behavior. We then modeled the financial impact of building emotional connections with customers at each step on the pathway from unconnected to fully connected.
    Our analysis showed that although fully connected customers constituted just 22% of customers in the category, they accounted for 37% of revenue and they spent, on average, twice as much annually ($400) as highly satisfied customers. Enhancing emotional connection could be a viable growth strategy if the retailer could attract fully connected customers from competitors, transform satisfied customers into fully connected ones, or both.
    Further segmentation revealed a group of especially valuable customers. We labeled them Fashion Flourishers, because apparel connects to their deep desire for excitement, social acceptance, and self-expression. As a group, Flourishers are the most emotionally connected segment by far; half are already fully connected to the category. Comparing the ratios of various emotion-based segments’ spending to those segments’ size highlights extraordinary differences in value: Flourishers have a ratio of 1.9—nearly twice the market average and more than nine times that of the least-connected group (whom we called Can’t Please Them, and whose ratio is just 0.2). Given the relatively fixed cost structure of retailing, acquiring and retaining Flourishers represented an opportunity to boost revenue and margins.
    A detailed profile of Flourishers underscored their attractiveness and exposed ways for the retailer to target them. Customers in this segment:
    • have a high lifetime value, spending an average of $468 a year in the category, versus $235 for other customers.
    • shop more often and advocate more: Fully 46% of Flourishers shop key fashion categories at least monthly, versus 21% of all shoppers. Flourishers are 1.4 times as likely as other customers to recommend retailers to their friends and family members.
    • are less price-sensitive: They are 2.3 times as likely as other customers to say they are “willing to pay more for the best fashion products,” 1.7 times less likely to make fashion purchase decisions solely on the basis of price, and 1.3 times less likely to shop for the lowest prices.
    • are predominantly female and younger, more ethnically diverse, and more likely to live in urban centers than other customers.
    • are more digitally engaged than other segments: They are 2.3 times as likely to research a fashion retailer online, 2.9 times as likely to shop for fashion products through their mobile devices, and 3.7 times as likely to follow a retailer on social media.
    Drawing on these and other insights, the retailer created a blueprint for pursuing the most valuable customer opportunities. By applying the category segmentation scheme to the more than 25 million people in its customer database, it determined the financial value and behaviors of its own Flourishers, confirming that they spent substantially more than other customers and had the highest lifetime value and the lowest attrition and price sensitivity of any segment. It estimated that moving satisfied Flourishers up the pathway to full emotional connection could increase annual sales by 3% to 5%, and that luring Flourishers away from competitors could increase revenue by 5% to 8%. Because members of this group spend more per capita than other customers and turn over less often, the analysis also predicted improvements in operating margins and returns on capital.

    2. Quantify key motivators.

    Next, by analyzing tens of thousands of Flourishers across the category, we quantified the impact of more than 40 motivators on the group’s purchasing, spending, loyalty, and advocacy. We identified the most important category motivators—the ones that bore the strongest relationship to purchases—and assessed the retailer’s competitive position in each. The financial analysis and modeling showed that further investments to strengthen the customer experience around the desires to “feel a sense of belonging,” “feel a sense of thrill,” and “feel a sense of freedom”—the motivators driving category purchase behavior and for which the retailer already had the strongest position—were likely to yield the highest ROI. Those motivators therefore became the focus of specific customer-experience investments.

    3. Optimize investments across functions.

    To maximize opportunities from emotional connection, companies must look beyond the marketing department. The retailer examined every function and customer touchpoint to find ways to enhance high-ROI emotional motivators. This brought four major investment areas into focus: stores, online and omnichannel experiences, merchandising, and message targeting.
    Stores.
    To estimate which of the retailer’s more than 700 stores had the most Flourisher customers, we scored each one according to the presence of this segment in the store’s trading area. We found that high-scoring stores generated up to 25% more revenue than others. Their same-store sales were growing twice as quickly, and their operating profit was 30% greater. Their profit margins were enhanced by 10% higher inventory turns and—consistent with expectations—by lower coupon usage. (Flourishers don’t just say they’re willing to pay more—they actually do pay more.)
    These analytics changed the retailer’s store location strategy. We mapped the concentrations of Flourishers in all U.S. markets and submarkets, along with the segment’s propensities to shop at more than 150 other retailers. The company’s real estate team now uses a predictive model to identify sites near Flourishers and also near other retailers they frequent.
    The change is paying off. New stores in trading areas with high concentrations of Flourishers have first-year sales that are 20% higher than historical averages, leading to faster break-even times and higher returns on capital. Further analysis has revealed opportunities to open hundreds of stores catering to underserved Flourisher populations. To free up capital for new stores, the retailer is closing ones in low-Flourisher areas.
    Emotional-connection analytics have also allowed the retailer to understand which aspects of the in-store shopping experience are most important to Flourishers. Because those qualities often aren’t recognized by customers themselves, they had not informed store design. Flourishers say it’s important that sales associates are easy to find, that clearance items are easy to locate, and that stores have free Wi-Fi. However, analysis showed that those aren’t actually the features that drive their visits and purchases.
    On the basis of its modeling, the retailer predicted that the option to purchase online and pick up in-store—something that few customers say is important and that was available only on a limited basis—would be a key driver of emotional connection (it speaks to Flourishers’ desire to “feel a sense of freedom”). It tested targeted communication and in-store promotion of the option and saw a material lift in sales; it has now committed capital to a nationwide rollout of the capability. Similarly, the retailer predicted that seeing imagery in-store of “people like you” would drive emotional connection and purchasing among Flourishers (although they say that this factor is unimportant). As a test, it expanded its presence on photo-sharing social media sites and encouraged customers to submit selfies showing their favorite outfits and styles. Selfie slide shows are (with subjects’ permission) displayed on large screens in test stores, thus addressing Flourishers’ desire to “feel a sense of belonging.” Research indicates that the segment has responded to this motivator and increased purchase intent.
    The retailer is now designing and testing store experiences to leverage nearly a dozen other drivers of emotional connection.
    Online and omnichannel experiences.
    Like individual store environments, online and omnichannel experiences can be optimized for emotional connection. To this end the retailer quantified the impact of more than 100 omnichannel touchpoints on customers’ emotional connection and spending. These included mobile app browsing and purchasing, visits to the retailer’s social media pages, e-commerce site navigation, and in-store returns of merchandise bought online. Each touchpoint was scored according to its potential impact on emotional connection and spending. Statistical models then revealed the most powerful combinations of touchpoints at each stage of the customer journey, allowing the retailer to hone its omnichannel strategy and prioritize investments.
    For example, Flourishers say that using a computer to shop online via an easy-to-use site is important to purchase decisions. In reality, the ease and allure of the mobilesite and the availability of services such as ApplePay have a far greater impact on emotional connection and spending levels. The retailer is using such insights to design investments across e-commerce, mobile, and social media that will build emotional connections with Flourishers. For instance, it developed multiple concepts for the navigational redesign and aesthetic reskin of its mobile app, tested how effectively each version enhanced feelings of “freedom,” “belonging,” and “thrill” and drove purchases, and rolled out the best one.
    Merchandising.
    Merchandise selection, from the broad category level to specific labels, can be optimized to drive emotional connection. The retailer now tracks the purchasing habits of Flourishers nationwide through point-of-sale data collected from hundreds of retailers by independent research companies. By applying the Flourisher segmentation to these POS databases, it has modeled the segment’s purchase behavior across more than 20 product categories and 100 labels and learned which of the approximately 10 competitive retailers these consumers buy from. The resulting insights have exposed gaps in merchandise important to Flourishers, and the retailer is working with its manufacturers to rebalance its mix.
    Message targeting.
    Having identified its Flourisher customers, the retailer can now send them personalized messages designed to resonate with the emotional motivators that drive behavior at each stage of the customer journey. For example, when Flourishers are initially considering the retailer, “having fun” while shopping is paramount. At the point of purchase, “helps me feel creative” emerges as key. Working from such insights, the retailer has developed a series of messages targeting Flourishers and timed according to their position in the journey: A rules engine sends out e-mails tailored to browsing, transacting, and servicing interactions. Response rates to this direct-marketing campaign are 40% to 210% higher than historical averages.
    Media selection can also be finely tuned to boost emotional connection. We profiled the media consumption of Flourishers across 500 TV shows, 100 websites and social networks, 50 types of mobile apps, 80 print publications, and 20 types of radio programming. Working with its ad agency, the retailer is executing emotional-connection-based media plans. For example, knowing that Flourishers are enthusiastic users of Instagram, YouTube, and Twitter, it has scaled up its programs on these platforms, which has increased its marketing ROI.

    4. Systematize, measure, and learn.

    Leveraging emotional connection does not require turning your business processes upside down; you can embed relevant strategies into existing work streams. This is most effectively done by making emotional connection a key performance indicator and including it on the cross-functional senior-management dashboard.
    The retailer developed a scorecard that gives the CEO and the executive team a single-page view of customers’ progression on the emotional-connection pathway, along with the increase or decrease in connected customers of the company and its key competitors. The scorecard shows the correlation of customers’ emotional-connection scores with lifetime value measures such as annual spending, churn, and tenure. It also shows how the business impacts of specific emotions are trending and how Flourishers engage with key in-store and omnichannel touchpoints that drive emotional connection. In addition, the retailer includes emotional-connection metrics in its ongoing testing of media messages, store designs, and digital and mobile experiences.
    The results of these strategic and operational changes are startling. Same-store sales for stores serving Flourishers realized growth of 3.5% over the past year, whereas annual same-store growth over the past five years has averaged just 1%. Inventory turns increased more than 25%. Market share and customer advocacy also grew (the number of customers recommending the retailer is up 20% year-over-year), contributing to record-high customer lifetime values. Underlying all these gains is a 20% rise in the company’s emotional-connection score—largely the result of moving satisfied customers to full emotional connection.

    The Management Imperative

    Embracing an emotional-connection strategy across the organization requires deep customer insights, analytical capabilities, and, above all, a managerial commitment to align the organization with the new way of thinking. It’s important that marketing not hoard the strategy as “its” domain (although the function can and should use emotional connection to demonstrate the direct financial impact of its spending). Instead, marketing must partner with other functions, teaching and socializing emotional connection. The retailer we profiled now uses emotional connection to drive alignment across the operations management team, the C-suite, and the boardroom. At the outset the CEO identified emotional connection as a strategy to restore profitable growth. The CFO and the chief strategy officer then “sized the financial prize,” leading the heads of marketing, stores, customer experience, and merchandising to collaborate on an integrated strategy.
    The advent of big data analytics brings clarity, discipline, and rigor to companies’ long-held desire to connect with the customer emotions that truly matter. Emotional connections no longer have to be a mystery—they can be a new source of real competitive advantage and growth.